my Bernese Mountain dog which is a male weights around 7-8 stone! and for his breed that is quite small, and he's no bigger than 3 foot. however my nans dog (girl) is much smaller in weight and size.
Male Bernese Mountain Dogs are usually 25 to 27½ inches tall at the shoulder and weigh 85 to 110 pounds. Bitches (females) are usually 23 to 26 inches tall at the shoulder, and weigh 80 to 105 pounds.
1. pointer to a constant means you can not change what the pointer points to 2. constant pointer means you can not change the pointer.
as many as possible as long as they as the dog is kept fit and healthy. Illness can make the puppies have problems when born, so just be careful.
Many dogs have webbed feet: Akita, Brussels Griffon, Chesapeake Bay Retriever, Chinook, Field Spaniel, German Shepherd, German Shorthaired Pointer, German Wirehaired Pointer, Irish Water Spaniel, Labrador Retriever, Leonberger, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia Duck Tolling Retriever, Otterhound, Plott Hound, Portuguese Water Dog, Redbone Coonhound, Spanish Water Dog, Weimaraner, Wirehaired Pointing Griffon.
Generic pointer of type 'void *' is compatible with any (data-)pointer, but you cannot use the following operators on it: + - ++ -- += -= * -> []
The typical name for a cross between a Labrador and a pointer is Lab-pointer. These dogs, when receiving the best of both parents, are energetic, lively and workable.
'this' is an object-pointer: it points to the current object (usable only in non-static methods).
A Null pointer has the value 0. void pointer is a generic pointer introduced by ANSI. Before ANSI, char pointers are used as generic pointer. Generic pointer can hold the address of any data type. Pointers point to a memory address, and data can be stored at that address.
A structure is a collection of primitives or other structures. A pointer is a memory address. Comparison of the two is like comparing bowling balls to cinder blocks. You can say that a structure defines the layout of the data, while a pointer points to data that is a particular structure.
The skin between your thumb and pointer finger.
The pointer on a galvenometer moves due to magnetic force between the current carrying coil in the pointer assembly and the permanent magnet surrounding that coil.